slawormiir: Damnnn niggarrrr Sanwo olu, buhari, and the the Nigerian army don't know what they have put their hand into Initially the army says we were not there Then later they say we were there but at the request of sanwo olu...and we didn't use live ammunition...it was blank ammunition we used Before you know it...they were preventing panel from assessing their morgue And as a real niggarrr am aware only the generalisimo can give orders to the army....because as a generalisimo the army is at your beck and call... Hahhaha...guess what niggarrrrs....buhari is the generalisimo....and the governor can also take permission from buhari to request for the army..which means buhari and sanwo olu are in deep shit
bro you analyse the matter wella...take this bottles and chil out first!
This people should their own problem. They already have COVID-19 and recession, they should deal with that and stop meddling into the affair of a sovereign nation.
The same UK that milked Africa dried
You are speaking confused words with your statement here.
Calm down or better still visit a psychiatrist to help you deal with your denial about the current Dictator Regime in Nigeria and what it has done to show disgrace to the World.
blacknp: Toothless UK, we have been waiting for sanctions on China, because of China’s over handedness in Hong Kong? Nothing can happen, they sanction, we sanction, nothing dey Britain, other than covid 19.
faoogoke: Priti Patel sought to publicly intervene three times on behalf of an offshore company which has been accused in a British court of obtaining a £100m contract from the Nigerian government through corruption.
She repeatedly backed the company, Process & Industrial Development (P&ID), a British Virgin Islands-registered gas company, in its long legal dispute with the Nigerian government over a gas processing plant.
The home secretary is currently in the centre of a political storm after being accused of bullying staff in her department. She faces calls to resign after an investigation concluded that she had breached the ministerial code of conduct, although it also found her actions may have been “unintentional”.
Ms Patel’s intervention in the court case took place before she was appointed home secretary by Boris Johnson. She was joined in supporting the company by Shanker Singham, a prominent fellow Brexit advocate, who is now a government trade adviser, in the bitterly contested legal action.
The case had been an issue of huge public interest in Nigeria with accusations of bribery and collusion between public officials and private concerns. President Muhammadu Buhari raised the matter during a speech at the United Nations General Assembly in September. “The present Nigerian government is facing the challenges of corruption head on,” he said. “We are giving notice to international criminal groups by the vigorous prosecution of the P&ID scam attempting to cheat Nigeria out of billions of dollars.”
P&ID had an agreement with Nigeria to build a massive plant to process natural gas. No work, however, was carried out on the plant. The company blamed the government for not supplying the gas; the government claims the contract was part of a fraudulent scheme.
P&ID had won compensation of $10bn over the failed deal. But the Nigerian government are appealing against the judgment, claiming that massive bribes had been paid to secure the contract.
P&ID denies any wrongdoing and holds that the Nigerian government had invented the corruption allegations in an effort to avoid paying compensation and to delay the seizure of assets.
In September, a judge in London granted the Nigerian government the right to appeal. He ruled that “Nigeria has established a strong prima facie case” that the contract was “procured by bribes paid to insiders as part of a larger scheme to defraud Nigeria”. Sitting in the High Court earlier this month, Sir Ross Cranston added that there is “also a strong prima facie case” that one of the firm’s directors, and a main witness in the court case “gave perjured evidence”.
The Nigerian government had a separate ruling in their favour when the court ordered the release of £200m it had put in place as security while the appeal is being heard. Judge Cranston had rejected the request by P&ID to increase the security level to £400m.
Ms Patel first publicly supported P&ID in an article for the newspaper City AM in November 2018, saying that Nigeria “must honour its obligations to companies like P&ID” and pay the firm “almost $9bn” (as the sum in legal action was at that stage). She condemned the further legal action by the Nigerian government as a “running scandal”, “obstinate”, and “flouting international law and convention”.
In May last year, Ms Patel wrote an introduction to a pamphlet by Shanker Singham which also backed P&ID against Nigeria. The pamphlet had been produced by a consultancy firm run by Mr Singham, called Competere.
The same month Ms Patel co-wrote an article in the Daily Telegraph newspaper with Mr Singham about post-Brexit aid and trade, offering support once again for P&ID, and an apparent warning to Nigeria on the consequences for its alleged failure to adhere to laws.
The article said: “The erosion of Nigeria’s commitment to the rule of law is highly worrying. Currently, Nigeria is a defendant in multiple investor disputes, including with telecoms firm MTN; an energy project with P&ID; and a hydroelectric contract with Sunrise Power. In the P&ID case, Nigeria owes the company over $9bn, due to Nigeria’s failure to honour a gas supply contract.”
It continued: “The UK’s national interest is best-served by an open system that encourages free trade, protects property rights, and upholds the rule of law. Our development strategy and our independent trade policy post-Brexit can be harnessed to ensure maximum value for the British taxpayer.”
There were already recurring allegations of corruption in Nigeria over the deal when Ms Patel and Mr Singham expressed their support for P&ID in the second article.
The day before the Telegraph article appeared there was an interview with Brendan Cahill, from Ireland, one of the co-founders of P&ID, in a Nigerian newspaper during which he was asked “there has been a persistent claim that P&ID is a ‘fake’ company that made a ‘fraudulent arrangement’ with some persons in Nigeria. How do you react to this claim?”
Mr Cahill replied: “We are well aware of the government’s efforts to characterise P&ID, and its founders, as frauds. This is absolutely false. The arbitrators in London spent five years carefully reviewing the written agreement and all the facts surrounding the deal, and in the end they unanimously concluded that Nigeria was to blame for the deal’s collapse and had to pay damages to P&ID.”
The Nigerian government alleges that P&ID paid more than $390,000 (almost £303,000) in bribes to secure the contract. The country’s attorney general, Abubakar Malami, submitted a witness statement to the Property Courts of England and Wales, High Courts of Justice in January this year.
Mr Malami, in his statement, alleges that P&ID indirectly paid more than $300,000 (£225, 850) to a company linked to an official who reviewed the contract. It also alleges two P&ID executives dropped a duffel bag packed with $50,000 in the trunk of his car in the capital, Abuja, in April 2009.
Grace Taiga, a former petroleum ministry lawyer in Nigeria who oversaw a contract review committee, has also been charged with accepting bribes from P&ID-linked companies between 2015 and 2019. Ms Taiga was scheduled to retire in September 2010, say investigators, but she remained in her position for another 16 months as the P&ID contract was being finalised.
Ms Taiga has pleaded not guilty to the charges.
Ms Patel and Mr Singham did not respond to questions about their public support for P&ID and whether they were aware of the corruption allegations.
P&ID did not respond to questions about the legal action or why Ms Patel and Mr Singham was supporting them, or what their working relationship was with Ms Patel and Mr Singham.
The company said previously: “The economic cost to Nigeria of fighting and losing this case is substantial. Nigeria, which emerged from recession in 2017, approved a three-year plan in 2016 to borrow more from abroad.
“The government wants 40 per cent of its loans to come from offshore to lower borrowing costs and help to fund its record-high budgets. In addition, the Buhari administration continues to incur costs in fighting this battle in the UK and US courts, and due to its failure to comply with court procedures, has been forced to pay some costs of P&ID’s counsel.
“The re-elected Buhari administration must come to terms with the award and decide whether to continue with delaying tactics to postpone the inevitable, or if the new government has the courage to atone for its previous mistakes and reach a settlement that will allow the country to move forward.” Solomon Hughes and Kim Sengupta
I hope Burutai, Buhari, Lair Mohammed and the other henchmen of this dictatorship have moved their money from London and British Islands in the Caribbean.
slawormiir: Damnnn niggarrrr Sanwo olu, buhari, and the the Nigerian army don't know what they have put their hand into Initially the army says we were not there Then later they say we were there but at the request of sanwo olu...and we didn't use live ammunition...it was blank ammunition we used Before you know it...they were preventing panel from assessing their morgue And as a real niggarrr am aware only the generalisimo can give orders to the army....because as a generalisimo the army is at your beck and call... Hahhaha...guess what niggarrrrs....buhari is the generalisimo....and the governor can also take permission from buhari to request for the army..which means buhari and sanwo olu are in deep shit
Deep shit as how? You talk like unexposed here you're not a real niggarrr
blacknp: Toothless UK, we have been waiting for sanctions on China, because of China’s over handedness in Hong Kong? Nothing can happen, they sanction, we sanction, nothing dey Britain, other than covid 19.
How can UK sanction China that has an economy thripple that of tht kingdom? Nigeria is a different. Assets freeze, travel bans for individuals and their families for 600 years will be appropriate.
I have always known that this endsars protest have been hijacked by enemies of this country. How can pratroitic citizens petition their country for sanction before a country that commit itself to our country's military training when we are still at war with insurgents and bandits?!
salykely: I have always known that this endsars protest have been hijacked by enemies of this country. How can pratroitic citizens petition their country for sanction before a country that commit itself to our country's military training when we are still at war with insurgents and bandits?!
There is something wrong with your head.
A country that kills innocent civilians and disrespects them by covering it up does not deserve patriotism.
slawormiir: Damnnn niggarrrr Sanwo olu, buhari, and the the Nigerian army don't know what they have put their hand into Initially the army says we were not there Then later they say we were there but at the request of sanwo olu...and we didn't use live ammunition...it was blank ammunition we used Before you know it...they were preventing panel from assessing their morgue And as a real niggarrr am aware only the generalisimo can give orders to the army....because as a generalisimo the army is at your beck and call... Hahhaha...guess what niggarrrrs....buhari is the generalisimo....and the governor can also take permission from buhari to request for the army..which means buhari and sanwo olu are in deep shit
don't forget to include the National leader of the all progressive congress. Bola Ahmed Tinubu
Even if so, the UK cannot make the "zoo" fall. We shouldn't underestimate the sovereignty of a nation because of emotions. The UK can only debate and possibly issue threats bothering on economic or trade ties. They can't come in and remove Buhari from power or even do anything beyond that.
However, that said, it's good that they are debating this issue. At the very least, it'll be a national embarassment. If sustained, it could lead to serious trade, diplomatic and political tensions.
I think by the time they get a balanced information, they will discover it is not as bad as people were made to believed.
Me think say dem don forget us for naija make our embezzlement minded politicians kill us finish na....
from the top: Buhari, Sanwo olu, The Army, don enter.
At the last verdict bring dem to street make we stone dem to death
NB, Mohammedu Buhari your present regime in Nigeria don enter history book, children go study am for school and know how evil � you are, the kids you killed their daddy will also study it in school